Days after hackers released millions of e-mail addresses connected with a website designed to facilitate extramarital affairs, reports have surfaced that some accounts were created using Vatican-affiliated e-mail addresses. The Catholic Herald reported …
In a new YouTube video, Sam Rader, from Terrell, Texas, admits he ‘sinned’ by setting up an account on Ashley Madison two years ago. However, he says his wife and God have now forgiven him.
Gawker is reporting that Josh Duggar allegedly had an account with Ashley Madison – the site created to help married individuals find people with whom they could have affairs.
The Ashley Madison hack has revealed a lot more than personal email addresses, with bizarre pick-up lines, untruthful birth dates and users’ smoking habits also unearthed.
SAN FRANCISCO — The database dump for the Ashley Madison cheating database appears to include at least three vatican.com addresses and more than 800 from microsoft.com. The surprisingly popular website for married people looking for affairs was …
People working at the Vatican are reportedly among the 37 million users of infidelity website Ashley Madison. Websites of at least two dozen people with the .va address are among those who had signed up to meet married …
Michelle Thomson, the married MP for Edinburgh West, said she is the victim of a malicious campaign after hackers named her as a member of Ashley Madison.
In a dark web post entitled ‘Time’s Up!’ hackers today dumped a 9.7 gigabyte file with email addresses, usernames, passwords and credit card transactions of users.
By Alastair Sharp and Josephine Mason TORONTO (Reuters) – Hackers dumped online personal details of more than a million users of infidelity website AshleyMadison.com, tech websites reported on Tuesday, the latest high-profile cyber attack that threatens to wreak strife in relationships across the globe. Have an affair," hackers claimed to publish a huge cache of […]
AshleyMadison.com said it was investigating the validity of customer data leaked on Tuesday, and slammed the hackers as “moral judges.”